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WEATHER University of Southern California 19 6 6
There will be low clouds and local fog this morning with haiy sunshine. F\ \ tt -\t a nnn A T A IVT SWEEPSTAKES WINNER OF
L/AIL/Y w 1ROJAN CALIFORNIA INTERCOLLEGIATE
PRESS ASSOCIATION
vol. xvn
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 1966
No. 96
■ »
SPECIAL REPORT
USC Growth Unprecedented
(TliU is the tir>»t of a two-part special report on the
university budget. I'oday's article deals with investments;
tomorrow’s will 1*«* concerned with expenditures. —The;
Editor.)
By O’BRIEN
\s>»istant Hanging Editor
On a warm afternoon in spring. when the Santa Ana winds carry )u t from the desert floor across miles of houses. 1' inns and freeway? to the heart of Hollywood. a housewife piles her four .children into their sedi'.n and drives to the Town and Country Center located at Third and Farfax.
Win re she shops for daily household supplies was grazing land 60 years ago. waiting- for the first movie producer to film the first western.
One hundred veal's ago it was part of the La Brea Rancho. Its owners. John and Henry Hancock, had been given the land by the federal government as payment for surveying work. Since it was worth only about an acre, they decided to make the best of a bad deal by farming it.
Today the hind represents one of many invest-ir.ents by the University of Southern California. The shop buildings are also owned by USC. Their rental contributes money to the Hancock Foundation specifically for th ' purpose of marine biological research. It is all p?rt of 11 cents of the investment dollar by the university — this 11 cents an investment in real estate.
Total Is $,V2 Million
USC has a total investment of nearly $52 million, the annual returns of which equal nearly $1 million. In addition to real estate the university holds government bonds representing 67 cents of the investment dollar and blue chip stocks making up another 15 cents. It also has investments in such things as the Dominguez Oil Field.
The reason for this is simple. A university must plan over the long haul. These investments represent the surest form of annual income and are easily liquidated in time of financial emergency.
Thus, while this endowment totals only two cents of the annual income dollar — small in comparison to Harvard which depends on its endowment for 33 cents — the figure is somewhat deceiving since the total has trebled since President Topping assumed office in 1957: It has only proportionally remained the same as the 1957 figure.
USC Belies on Tuition Income
However, were the government to pull a large number of students from the university for the war in Vietnam, or were enrollment to drop off significantly for any reason. USC would feel the pinch worse than a school such as Harvard, due to heavier reliance on tuition income.
Tuition income at the university comes to 39 cents of the total income dollar. Such an emergency could prompt liquidation of some of the university’s invested assets — and of course, such an occasion is partly what those assets are for.
Contracts and grants by the federal government continue to play a major roll in the income of the university. USC received S12 million last year, or 29 cents
(Continued on Page 2)
MEDIEVAL FRESCO—Dr. Edward Peck, director of the University Galleries, shows a student an exhibit piece from
Daily Trojan Photo by Ed Sfapletort
the medieval art show now on display at the Fisher Gallery at University Avenue and Exposition Boulevard.
Middle Ages Art, Concert Coincide
A special program of medieval and early renaissance music will be presented Sunday afternoon at 2:30 in the Elizabeth II. Fisher Gallery under the direction of Dr. Ingolf Dahl, professor of music.
The musicale is scheduled to coincide in theme with the exhibit of medieval j
frescoes from Yugoslavia the Yugoslavian government currently on display in the!to reproduce the works. Fisher Gallery, The program j The paintings are exact
Coordinator to Discuss Current Fashion Trends
What to wear and how to wear it will be the subject for discussion between USC women and Judy Brand, a Joseph Magnin fashion coordinator, tomorrow at -1 p.m. in the lounge of College Hall.
All university women are invited to the fashion lecture and workshop where Miss Brand will present fashion trends, concentrating on Paris
designs and how they apply to American life.
Practical tips on wardrobe coordination are part of the afternoon fashion affair, which will" include grooming reminders and accessory demonstrations. The new look, taking in low heels and color combinations will be contrasted to old trends of , back-combed hair and three-inch heels, which, says Miss Brand, are “out.”
MAX FRANKEL
. . . Views Communist Flux
Reporter To Talk on iCommunists
“The Communist World in : Flux” will be discussed by
■ Max Frankel, diplomatic correspondent of The New York Times' Washington Bureau, at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Foyer of Town and Gown.
The lecture will inaugurate a series of free public lectures on Soviet and Chinese Communist foreign policy sponsored by the Research Institute on Communist Strategy ;and Propaganda. The series will honor the late Charles Malamuth, senior research associate of the institute, who *died in 1965.
■
j Frankel, former New York Times bureau chief in Moscow. brings to the lecture platform an extensive background of on-the-spot observation and reporting of ; events bearing on the Com->munist world.
will take place in one of the exhibit rooms.
Students in an advanced course in medieval music, collegium musicum, taught by Dr. Dahl, will play replicas of period instruments.
The Yugoslavian exhibit, j continuing until April 10, consists of tempura-on-can-
copies of the originals, down to the smallest detail, Dr. Edward Peck emphasized. Peck is director of the University Galleries and professor of art history in the School of Architecture and Fine Arts.
Not only the texture and faded colors have been reproduced, however. The art-
vas replicas of stone frescoes i ists simulated cracks, flaws, from ancient monastaries in ] wearing away of the stone and near Serbia. Sixteen. art-1 facings and aging to a re-ists wrere commissioned by markable degree, he said.
Retarded Are Useful In Society—Professor
GRIZZLY STORY
A century ago the mentally retarded were classed with the mentally ill and were doomed to live out their lives in remotely-located asylums, untended, and forgotten by a society that feared them and 'wanted no reminders of their existence.
“Today wre know that with : proper training and education many mentally retarded individuals can become taxpayers instead of tax burdens.” Dr. Richard Koch said yesterday at the opening of a five-day mental retardation institute at Childrens Hospital.
Cinema Professor Researches In Wyoming, Gets Bear Facts
children born without an enzyme that normally helps the body correctly use food, particularly protein, was a guest lecturer at the institute.
When this enzyme is missing, food accumulates in the bloodstream and poisons the , central nervous system, causing mental retardation.
The child w'ho goes on the PKU (phenolkatonuria) diet will stay on this for possibly I the first six or seven years | of his life and thereafter j should be on a low protein I diet for the rest of his life, Dr. Bickel explained.
Constitution Vote Set for Tomorrow
Students will have the opportunity to vote on the new ASSC Constitution tomorrow, for one day only, from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. in Alumni Memorial Park in front of Doheny Library.
Election results will be announced shortly afterwards in the Student Lounge on the third floor of the Student Union.
Students must present student identification in order to vote.
Frosh Spur Orientation Improvement
By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH News Editor The Freshman Class and ;the Student Activities Office have joined forces in an attempt to improve orientation.
: as well as other areas of campus life.
As announced several I weeks ago. Freshman Class President Larry Hall and members of his cabinet compiled a questionnaire covering registration procedures, orientation problems, social problems, and the possibilities of incorporating an hon-or system and a pass-fail grading system at USC.
Original Intent Hall originally intended to compile the answers given to the questionnaire's inquiries in a guide for incoming freshmen to help ease them over some of the problems they were likely to encounter as university students.
On talking the program over with Clive Grafton, director of student activities. Hall learned that Grafton was in the process of sending out evaluation forms to freshmen asking for their opinions of the strong and weak points of last fall's orientation.
Projects Dovetail “Since our project dovetailed with Mr. Grafton’s in ithe area of orientation.” Hall said, “we decided to include our findings in h;s report."
Therefore. Hall will ask members of the various service groups to fill out the i questionnaire this week.
The findings of this survey will be compiled and used to write . a true-false, fill-in questionnaire. This in turn will be distributed to dorm residents and these results will be added to Grafton's ! sampling.
Troy Tribute Will Unfold
The Trojan Tribute Friday evening will mark another high point for the University of Southern California, as several campus organizations perform at th<> Music Center for the first time.
The tribute, sponsored by th*-* Board of Trustees and the General Alumni Association, will be “an ex- mmm if* i tremely special occasion." Di- y\i1/1W rector of Special Events Bob j
.Jani said, “as the program »|, ,» is a combination of an alurn- I" I/ft I / J/ f 1/ ni day and past associates “*/
USC alumna Nadine Con- LlDGtdfIZGCi \ ner. sopr ano, and Brian Sul-
jlivan. tenor, will be guest Eligibility for the College soloists. Miss Conner a 111 Work-Studv Program ha a sing selections from Song to been liberalized by an amend-the Moon trom Rusalka by ment to the Economic Oppor-|Dvorak: and Musetta's Waltz tunitv Act of 1964. from “La Boheme” bv Puc-
cini.
Sullivan Sin^s
Sullivan will sing In Fer-nem Land from Wagner's “L>hengrin” and L’n Di All 'Azzurro Spazio from “Andrea Chenier” by Giordano .
“The Ballad of William Sycamore” composed by Halsey
The program involves finding on-campus jobs for students needing financial aid.
Formerly the student ap-lying for the program had to be from a family with an income of Ies<? than S4.000.
With the recent amendment. financial need will still be emphasized but other
Stevens, chairman of the students needing
Composition Department, wil! assistance to continue study be sung by the USC Concert Wlll ^ included ^ the Choir, conducted bv James H. Vail.
program.
Shasiiin Desai. student em-The L isC Chamber Singers, ployment counselor, said, under the direction of "Opportunities are available Charles L. Hirt. will perform for job placement on campus songs from their recent four- for the students in their field month tour of Europe and Gf interest.
Israel. “We want to create mean-
Their numbers include “Fa jugful jobs which will give L na Canzone. by \ ecchi the student experience in his (Italy); “Weep O Mine field of study." Desai said. Eyes,” by Bennet (England): Ninety per cent of the "II Est Bel Et Ben, ’ by Pas- wages are allotted by the sereau (France): "Du, Du Federal Government, leaving •Liegst Mir Im Herzen" (Ger- only 10 per cent for the Mr-jmanv); “Dance of the Shep-jing department to pay. herds.” by Kodaly (Hun- The program aikMra sm-; gary); and ‘ “ W i t n e s 3 ’ ’ dents to work a maximum of (United States). 15 hours a week during
Tenor Featured school and 40 hours when
Paul Mayo, tenor, will be classes are not in session, featured. Any student who considers
Liszt's “Hexameron” will himself eligible may submit be performed by three pi-tan application to the Student ( Continued on Page 2) Aid Office.
Science Center Set for Catalina
Construction of a major multi-million-dollar Marine Science Center at Fisherman’s Cove on Santa Catalina Island should start this summer. President Norman Topping announced Friday in Washington. D.C.
The first laboratory and classroom building should be
Independents 1 o 1 ^—
Meet Tomorrow
The Trojans for Inde-
pendent Government will
meet tomorrow at 3:15
p.m. in 133 Founders Hall. if
Sale
By CHICK ZAREMBA
How much area does a grizzly bear need in which to roam ? Why is one bear dominant over the others in a group ?
These aie among the questions that Eugene A. Petersen, assistant professor .of cinema, and a team of researchers from Montana State University have been trying to answer during the past three summers.
Petersen has aided the researchers by filming the ferocious grizzly bears’ behavior in their natural habitat, the wild Hayden Valley region of Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming. For his own sake, he used a telephotolens camera.
Game Reserve
The purpose of this work Is to determine the qualities that would have to be incorporated into a type of game reserve for the bea s. Game reserves are planned
for them because of the imminent da nger of their extinction.
The study is conducted by trapping the animals or shooting them with a dart gun containing a numbing drug. They are then weighed, measured, and classified according to tooth and clawr impressions and saliva and blood types.
Before being released, the grizzlies are equipped with a transistorized t r a n s mitter which keeps the researchers informed cf their location. This permits the bears’ wanderings to ba plotted on a map of the area.
Teaching Aid Petersen's films, which include actual shots cf the mating, eating, and liibernation habits of the grizzlies, were designed to be used as a teaching aid in classes in zoology at Montana State.
One of the results of this project was the discovery
that some grizzly bears become temporary homosexuals. This was found to occur in the young bears who find no place in the adult society.
In addition, it was observed that some of the older male bears prey upon the cubs. It is this that makes the mother so protective of her cubs and consequently so vicious.
Incomplete Hibernation i When some of the research-iers went into the hibernating i bears’ den, they discovered, much to their fright, that the I hibernation of a grizzly is not : complete. As a matter of fact, they awoke rather rapidly.
Petersen, who so far has | had enough luck to avoid being chased up a tree by an angry grizzly, says, “My time is coming.”
Indeed, it may be. Since his summer home is in Wyoming, he wall be spending future summers just trying to break his spotless record.
Modern medical science lias identified more than 100 diseases that can cause mental retardation, he said, and research is concentrated strongly on finding preventive approaches.
! Dr. Koch, associate profes-; sor of pediatrics at the School > of Medicine and head of Childrens Hospital’s division !of mental retardation, is chairman of the institute be-] ing held by the postgraduate j division of the School ofj Medicine with the pediatrics j department and staff of thej mental retardation division of Childrens Hospital.
Interferes in Learning
Retardation is an impair-iinent of intelligence that interferes with social and learning development, Dr. Koch said. The retarded child is slow to sit up. walk. speak, or be toilet trained.
“The brain is the body’s : most complicated organ.” Dr.' Koch said. “If a ‘light goes out’ in one area, the whole I mechanism is affected.”
Dr. Horst Bickel of Marburg University, Germany, inventor of the plienyl-analine1 ■ restricted diet for treating.
FOR TROY CAMP—Rita Tushingham and Alec Guinness are shown in a scene from Dr. Zhivago which will be shown lor Troy Camp April 16. Tickets are $1.60.
:>tiii on
Only 350 tickets are left or the Troy Camp benefit of Doctor Zhivago” on Saturday. April 16.
The special 9:30 a-m. screening costs SI.60 per ticket, a saving of S2.40 over the regular reserved seat ticket price of SI.
The ticket sale has been going faster than the Junior Class anticipated. Junior Class President Taylor Hack-ford commented. He expects the remaining 350 tickets to be sold by Friday.
“Doctor Zhivago” is the film adaptation of the Boris Pasternak novel of the same title. David Lean directed the three-hour-and-17-minute motion picture. His last two pictures. “Lawrence of Arabia” and “The Bridge on the River Kwai.” won the best picture and best director Academy Awards.
“Zhivago” is also nominated for the same awards plus eight others, including best screenplay, adaptation (Robert Bolt), best supporting actor (Tom Courtenay), best music score, substantially original (Maurice Jarre), best cinematography, color (Freddie Young) and best costume design, color ^Phyl-lis Dalton).
completed in the fall of 1967. he said.
USC is establishing the Marine Science Center through the Allan Hancock Foundation with the support and collaboration of Caltech: UC campuses at Los Angeles Irvine and Riverside: the State College System, Pomona and Occidental Colleges*.
“The unique site cannot be duplicated anywhere in the United States,” President Topping said.
In Washington to attend a luncheon given by the California Congressional delegation and the L'SC General Alumni Association. Dr. Topping talked about the Catalina project at a new's conference in the office of Ftep. Edward J. Roybal, i Architectural working drawings for a Sl-million marine biological laboratory , building have just been completed this week by the firm of William L. Pereira and Associates. master planners for Catalina Island. Dr. Topping said. Half the cost of the : structure will come from a S500.000 grant from the National Science Foundation.
A call fcr bids will be sent to contractors in about ten days, and construction could start in May or June.
The building will be thf* first unit of a complex of laboratories, lecture and conference rooms and a library W'hich will eventually accommodate 450 scientists, students and technicians.
USC has tw'o full-time scientists at Catalina, and researchers from the participating institutions are working on the island and commuting between it and the mainland. USC men are Robert Given, resident biologist, and Dennis Lees, scuba diving technician.

WEATHER University of Southern California 19 6 6
There will be low clouds and local fog this morning with haiy sunshine. F\ \ tt -\t a nnn A T A IVT SWEEPSTAKES WINNER OF
L/AIL/Y w 1ROJAN CALIFORNIA INTERCOLLEGIATE
PRESS ASSOCIATION
vol. xvn
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 1966
No. 96
■ »
SPECIAL REPORT
USC Growth Unprecedented
(TliU is the tir>»t of a two-part special report on the
university budget. I'oday's article deals with investments;
tomorrow’s will 1*«* concerned with expenditures. —The;
Editor.)
By O’BRIEN
\s>»istant Hanging Editor
On a warm afternoon in spring. when the Santa Ana winds carry )u t from the desert floor across miles of houses. 1' inns and freeway? to the heart of Hollywood. a housewife piles her four .children into their sedi'.n and drives to the Town and Country Center located at Third and Farfax.
Win re she shops for daily household supplies was grazing land 60 years ago. waiting- for the first movie producer to film the first western.
One hundred veal's ago it was part of the La Brea Rancho. Its owners. John and Henry Hancock, had been given the land by the federal government as payment for surveying work. Since it was worth only about an acre, they decided to make the best of a bad deal by farming it.
Today the hind represents one of many invest-ir.ents by the University of Southern California. The shop buildings are also owned by USC. Their rental contributes money to the Hancock Foundation specifically for th ' purpose of marine biological research. It is all p?rt of 11 cents of the investment dollar by the university — this 11 cents an investment in real estate.
Total Is $,V2 Million
USC has a total investment of nearly $52 million, the annual returns of which equal nearly $1 million. In addition to real estate the university holds government bonds representing 67 cents of the investment dollar and blue chip stocks making up another 15 cents. It also has investments in such things as the Dominguez Oil Field.
The reason for this is simple. A university must plan over the long haul. These investments represent the surest form of annual income and are easily liquidated in time of financial emergency.
Thus, while this endowment totals only two cents of the annual income dollar — small in comparison to Harvard which depends on its endowment for 33 cents — the figure is somewhat deceiving since the total has trebled since President Topping assumed office in 1957: It has only proportionally remained the same as the 1957 figure.
USC Belies on Tuition Income
However, were the government to pull a large number of students from the university for the war in Vietnam, or were enrollment to drop off significantly for any reason. USC would feel the pinch worse than a school such as Harvard, due to heavier reliance on tuition income.
Tuition income at the university comes to 39 cents of the total income dollar. Such an emergency could prompt liquidation of some of the university’s invested assets — and of course, such an occasion is partly what those assets are for.
Contracts and grants by the federal government continue to play a major roll in the income of the university. USC received S12 million last year, or 29 cents
(Continued on Page 2)
MEDIEVAL FRESCO—Dr. Edward Peck, director of the University Galleries, shows a student an exhibit piece from
Daily Trojan Photo by Ed Sfapletort
the medieval art show now on display at the Fisher Gallery at University Avenue and Exposition Boulevard.
Middle Ages Art, Concert Coincide
A special program of medieval and early renaissance music will be presented Sunday afternoon at 2:30 in the Elizabeth II. Fisher Gallery under the direction of Dr. Ingolf Dahl, professor of music.
The musicale is scheduled to coincide in theme with the exhibit of medieval j
frescoes from Yugoslavia the Yugoslavian government currently on display in the!to reproduce the works. Fisher Gallery, The program j The paintings are exact
Coordinator to Discuss Current Fashion Trends
What to wear and how to wear it will be the subject for discussion between USC women and Judy Brand, a Joseph Magnin fashion coordinator, tomorrow at -1 p.m. in the lounge of College Hall.
All university women are invited to the fashion lecture and workshop where Miss Brand will present fashion trends, concentrating on Paris
designs and how they apply to American life.
Practical tips on wardrobe coordination are part of the afternoon fashion affair, which will" include grooming reminders and accessory demonstrations. The new look, taking in low heels and color combinations will be contrasted to old trends of , back-combed hair and three-inch heels, which, says Miss Brand, are “out.”
MAX FRANKEL
. . . Views Communist Flux
Reporter To Talk on iCommunists
“The Communist World in : Flux” will be discussed by
■ Max Frankel, diplomatic correspondent of The New York Times' Washington Bureau, at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Foyer of Town and Gown.
The lecture will inaugurate a series of free public lectures on Soviet and Chinese Communist foreign policy sponsored by the Research Institute on Communist Strategy ;and Propaganda. The series will honor the late Charles Malamuth, senior research associate of the institute, who *died in 1965.
■
j Frankel, former New York Times bureau chief in Moscow. brings to the lecture platform an extensive background of on-the-spot observation and reporting of ; events bearing on the Com->munist world.
will take place in one of the exhibit rooms.
Students in an advanced course in medieval music, collegium musicum, taught by Dr. Dahl, will play replicas of period instruments.
The Yugoslavian exhibit, j continuing until April 10, consists of tempura-on-can-
copies of the originals, down to the smallest detail, Dr. Edward Peck emphasized. Peck is director of the University Galleries and professor of art history in the School of Architecture and Fine Arts.
Not only the texture and faded colors have been reproduced, however. The art-
vas replicas of stone frescoes i ists simulated cracks, flaws, from ancient monastaries in ] wearing away of the stone and near Serbia. Sixteen. art-1 facings and aging to a re-ists wrere commissioned by markable degree, he said.
Retarded Are Useful In Society—Professor
GRIZZLY STORY
A century ago the mentally retarded were classed with the mentally ill and were doomed to live out their lives in remotely-located asylums, untended, and forgotten by a society that feared them and 'wanted no reminders of their existence.
“Today wre know that with : proper training and education many mentally retarded individuals can become taxpayers instead of tax burdens.” Dr. Richard Koch said yesterday at the opening of a five-day mental retardation institute at Childrens Hospital.
Cinema Professor Researches In Wyoming, Gets Bear Facts
children born without an enzyme that normally helps the body correctly use food, particularly protein, was a guest lecturer at the institute.
When this enzyme is missing, food accumulates in the bloodstream and poisons the , central nervous system, causing mental retardation.
The child w'ho goes on the PKU (phenolkatonuria) diet will stay on this for possibly I the first six or seven years | of his life and thereafter j should be on a low protein I diet for the rest of his life, Dr. Bickel explained.
Constitution Vote Set for Tomorrow
Students will have the opportunity to vote on the new ASSC Constitution tomorrow, for one day only, from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. in Alumni Memorial Park in front of Doheny Library.
Election results will be announced shortly afterwards in the Student Lounge on the third floor of the Student Union.
Students must present student identification in order to vote.
Frosh Spur Orientation Improvement
By ELLIOT ZWIEBACH News Editor The Freshman Class and ;the Student Activities Office have joined forces in an attempt to improve orientation.
: as well as other areas of campus life.
As announced several I weeks ago. Freshman Class President Larry Hall and members of his cabinet compiled a questionnaire covering registration procedures, orientation problems, social problems, and the possibilities of incorporating an hon-or system and a pass-fail grading system at USC.
Original Intent Hall originally intended to compile the answers given to the questionnaire's inquiries in a guide for incoming freshmen to help ease them over some of the problems they were likely to encounter as university students.
On talking the program over with Clive Grafton, director of student activities. Hall learned that Grafton was in the process of sending out evaluation forms to freshmen asking for their opinions of the strong and weak points of last fall's orientation.
Projects Dovetail “Since our project dovetailed with Mr. Grafton’s in ithe area of orientation.” Hall said, “we decided to include our findings in h;s report."
Therefore. Hall will ask members of the various service groups to fill out the i questionnaire this week.
The findings of this survey will be compiled and used to write . a true-false, fill-in questionnaire. This in turn will be distributed to dorm residents and these results will be added to Grafton's ! sampling.
Troy Tribute Will Unfold
The Trojan Tribute Friday evening will mark another high point for the University of Southern California, as several campus organizations perform at th<> Music Center for the first time.
The tribute, sponsored by th*-* Board of Trustees and the General Alumni Association, will be “an ex- mmm if* i tremely special occasion." Di- y\i1/1W rector of Special Events Bob j
.Jani said, “as the program »|, ,» is a combination of an alurn- I" I/ft I / J/ f 1/ ni day and past associates “*/
USC alumna Nadine Con- LlDGtdfIZGCi \ ner. sopr ano, and Brian Sul-
jlivan. tenor, will be guest Eligibility for the College soloists. Miss Conner a 111 Work-Studv Program ha a sing selections from Song to been liberalized by an amend-the Moon trom Rusalka by ment to the Economic Oppor-|Dvorak: and Musetta's Waltz tunitv Act of 1964. from “La Boheme” bv Puc-
cini.
Sullivan Sin^s
Sullivan will sing In Fer-nem Land from Wagner's “L>hengrin” and L’n Di All 'Azzurro Spazio from “Andrea Chenier” by Giordano .
“The Ballad of William Sycamore” composed by Halsey
The program involves finding on-campus jobs for students needing financial aid.
Formerly the student ap-lying for the program had to be from a family with an income of Ies than S4.000.
With the recent amendment. financial need will still be emphasized but other
Stevens, chairman of the students needing
Composition Department, wil! assistance to continue study be sung by the USC Concert Wlll ^ included ^ the Choir, conducted bv James H. Vail.
program.
Shasiiin Desai. student em-The L isC Chamber Singers, ployment counselor, said, under the direction of "Opportunities are available Charles L. Hirt. will perform for job placement on campus songs from their recent four- for the students in their field month tour of Europe and Gf interest.
Israel. “We want to create mean-
Their numbers include “Fa jugful jobs which will give L na Canzone. by \ ecchi the student experience in his (Italy); “Weep O Mine field of study." Desai said. Eyes,” by Bennet (England): Ninety per cent of the "II Est Bel Et Ben, ’ by Pas- wages are allotted by the sereau (France): "Du, Du Federal Government, leaving •Liegst Mir Im Herzen" (Ger- only 10 per cent for the Mr-jmanv); “Dance of the Shep-jing department to pay. herds.” by Kodaly (Hun- The program aikMra sm-; gary); and ‘ “ W i t n e s 3 ’ ’ dents to work a maximum of (United States). 15 hours a week during
Tenor Featured school and 40 hours when
Paul Mayo, tenor, will be classes are not in session, featured. Any student who considers
Liszt's “Hexameron” will himself eligible may submit be performed by three pi-tan application to the Student ( Continued on Page 2) Aid Office.
Science Center Set for Catalina
Construction of a major multi-million-dollar Marine Science Center at Fisherman’s Cove on Santa Catalina Island should start this summer. President Norman Topping announced Friday in Washington. D.C.
The first laboratory and classroom building should be
Independents 1 o 1 ^—
Meet Tomorrow
The Trojans for Inde-
pendent Government will
meet tomorrow at 3:15
p.m. in 133 Founders Hall. if
Sale
By CHICK ZAREMBA
How much area does a grizzly bear need in which to roam ? Why is one bear dominant over the others in a group ?
These aie among the questions that Eugene A. Petersen, assistant professor .of cinema, and a team of researchers from Montana State University have been trying to answer during the past three summers.
Petersen has aided the researchers by filming the ferocious grizzly bears’ behavior in their natural habitat, the wild Hayden Valley region of Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming. For his own sake, he used a telephotolens camera.
Game Reserve
The purpose of this work Is to determine the qualities that would have to be incorporated into a type of game reserve for the bea s. Game reserves are planned
for them because of the imminent da nger of their extinction.
The study is conducted by trapping the animals or shooting them with a dart gun containing a numbing drug. They are then weighed, measured, and classified according to tooth and clawr impressions and saliva and blood types.
Before being released, the grizzlies are equipped with a transistorized t r a n s mitter which keeps the researchers informed cf their location. This permits the bears’ wanderings to ba plotted on a map of the area.
Teaching Aid Petersen's films, which include actual shots cf the mating, eating, and liibernation habits of the grizzlies, were designed to be used as a teaching aid in classes in zoology at Montana State.
One of the results of this project was the discovery
that some grizzly bears become temporary homosexuals. This was found to occur in the young bears who find no place in the adult society.
In addition, it was observed that some of the older male bears prey upon the cubs. It is this that makes the mother so protective of her cubs and consequently so vicious.
Incomplete Hibernation i When some of the research-iers went into the hibernating i bears’ den, they discovered, much to their fright, that the I hibernation of a grizzly is not : complete. As a matter of fact, they awoke rather rapidly.
Petersen, who so far has | had enough luck to avoid being chased up a tree by an angry grizzly, says, “My time is coming.”
Indeed, it may be. Since his summer home is in Wyoming, he wall be spending future summers just trying to break his spotless record.
Modern medical science lias identified more than 100 diseases that can cause mental retardation, he said, and research is concentrated strongly on finding preventive approaches.
! Dr. Koch, associate profes-; sor of pediatrics at the School > of Medicine and head of Childrens Hospital’s division !of mental retardation, is chairman of the institute be-] ing held by the postgraduate j division of the School ofj Medicine with the pediatrics j department and staff of thej mental retardation division of Childrens Hospital.
Interferes in Learning
Retardation is an impair-iinent of intelligence that interferes with social and learning development, Dr. Koch said. The retarded child is slow to sit up. walk. speak, or be toilet trained.
“The brain is the body’s : most complicated organ.” Dr.' Koch said. “If a ‘light goes out’ in one area, the whole I mechanism is affected.”
Dr. Horst Bickel of Marburg University, Germany, inventor of the plienyl-analine1 ■ restricted diet for treating.
FOR TROY CAMP—Rita Tushingham and Alec Guinness are shown in a scene from Dr. Zhivago which will be shown lor Troy Camp April 16. Tickets are $1.60.
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Only 350 tickets are left or the Troy Camp benefit of Doctor Zhivago” on Saturday. April 16.
The special 9:30 a-m. screening costs SI.60 per ticket, a saving of S2.40 over the regular reserved seat ticket price of SI.
The ticket sale has been going faster than the Junior Class anticipated. Junior Class President Taylor Hack-ford commented. He expects the remaining 350 tickets to be sold by Friday.
“Doctor Zhivago” is the film adaptation of the Boris Pasternak novel of the same title. David Lean directed the three-hour-and-17-minute motion picture. His last two pictures. “Lawrence of Arabia” and “The Bridge on the River Kwai.” won the best picture and best director Academy Awards.
“Zhivago” is also nominated for the same awards plus eight others, including best screenplay, adaptation (Robert Bolt), best supporting actor (Tom Courtenay), best music score, substantially original (Maurice Jarre), best cinematography, color (Freddie Young) and best costume design, color ^Phyl-lis Dalton).
completed in the fall of 1967. he said.
USC is establishing the Marine Science Center through the Allan Hancock Foundation with the support and collaboration of Caltech: UC campuses at Los Angeles Irvine and Riverside: the State College System, Pomona and Occidental Colleges*.
“The unique site cannot be duplicated anywhere in the United States,” President Topping said.
In Washington to attend a luncheon given by the California Congressional delegation and the L'SC General Alumni Association. Dr. Topping talked about the Catalina project at a new's conference in the office of Ftep. Edward J. Roybal, i Architectural working drawings for a Sl-million marine biological laboratory , building have just been completed this week by the firm of William L. Pereira and Associates. master planners for Catalina Island. Dr. Topping said. Half the cost of the : structure will come from a S500.000 grant from the National Science Foundation.
A call fcr bids will be sent to contractors in about ten days, and construction could start in May or June.
The building will be thf* first unit of a complex of laboratories, lecture and conference rooms and a library W'hich will eventually accommodate 450 scientists, students and technicians.
USC has tw'o full-time scientists at Catalina, and researchers from the participating institutions are working on the island and commuting between it and the mainland. USC men are Robert Given, resident biologist, and Dennis Lees, scuba diving technician.